key: cord-0889076-kzj263xj authors: Duggan, Jacqueline M.; Brooks, Timothy J.G. title: A Strategic Vaccine Facility for the UK date: 2005-03-18 journal: Vaccine DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.01.066 sha: ea917dc676d2025d36bfb18fff0a3da25643ac40 doc_id: 889076 cord_uid: kzj263xj This paper describes a proposed Strategic Vaccine Facility (SVF) to provide a capability to the UK to deal with new and emerging disease threats. It would underpin the vaccine manufacturing industry by developing expertise and technology to enable rapid manufacture of small batches of vaccines for emergency use against agents, such as bioterrorist agents and emerging diseases. It would have a rare ability to work with dangerous pathogens under containment, allowing the production of inactivated and live vaccines, which would be difficult in a conventional plant. The facility's output will include vaccine candidates and manufacturing protocols for transfer to industry, small vaccine batches for emergency use or clinical trials, and vaccine reference standards. It would also be available for manufacturing small batches of experimental and public health vaccines for the UK and the developing world, allowing clinical trials to be undertaken against key diseases. The threat of infectious disease spread in a population, either through natural or deliberate introduction, requires that governments plan their strategies to deal with these threats to protect their nation's health. This includes plans to manufacture and stockpile medical countermeasures, such as antibiotics and vaccines. Vaccines are a key defence against infectious diseases, but industry will only manufacture vaccines against a commercial interest and has little incentive to develop vaccines on a speculative basis against a threat that may not materialise. Two parliamentary committees in the UK have identified a need for a manufacturing facility that can respond rapidly to produce vaccines against infectious diseases that pose a threat to the UK [1, 2] . This paper outlines a proposal to meet this need. A Strategic Vaccine Facility (SVF) would provide the opportunity to develop production processes for a variety of experimental vaccines. These could then be tested in clinical trials and passed onto industry for production if indicated. Even if there was no immediate demand for the product, as for a vaccine against a new influenza strain, it could still be developed to a point allowing rapid production by industry in times of need, e.g., by preparing Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) seed banks. This would provide a strategic capability for coping with infectious diseases as a significant part of the UK preparedness plan. This paper sets out the concept for a Strategic Vaccine Facility to enhance the UK's capability to deal with new and emerging diseases. Pathogens capable of causing widespread disease can emerge at any time and are inherently unpredictable. We do not know when and where the next serious disease epidemic will arise and what the nature of that epidemic will be. Another notorious feature of some pathogens is their ability to spread over large areas in relatively little time. This has been further fuelled with the increase in international travel. Diseases that a few years ago would have been confined to a small, remote area can now rapidly spread world-wide in a short time span. Changes in environmental conditions, such as global warming, clearing of forestation for agriculture and widespread damming in arid regions are also factors in the emergence of disease. There are a number of different factors involved in a pathogen's ability to emerge as a disease threat. The main factors are outlined in Table 1 . Owing to constantly changing ecological and social factors, it is impossible to predict when and where the next emergence of a pathogen of importance to human health will be. Pathogens can disappear from niches, as well as emerge. Malaria was endemic in the UK until the 1920s when marsh drainage wiped out the main local mosquito vector (Anopheles atroparvus) from the UK [3] . It is a possibility that this mosquito will again find a niche in the UK and malaria will once again become endemic. Indeed, there are a number of reported "airport" malaria cases in the UK, where people living near to airports with incoming flights from malaria endemic zones are infected without having been abroad [4] . Transfer of infectious diseases through human activities such as air travel is a serious public health risk. There are over 100 cases of imported dengue virus infections into the UK each year (Dr. G. Lloyd, personal communication) and several imported cases of Lassa fever in European countries have been recorded [5] . There is the potential for these organisms to establish in a new country after importation, especially if the vector, such as mosquito species capable of transmitting infection, is present. The West Nile Virus (WNV) epidemic in the US began with the importation of virus into New York, which quickly established itself in the local mosquito population [6] and thence spread to most states in just a few years. The route of importation of the virus has not yet been established. SARS became an international problem due to rapid spread of this novel coronavirus from China to other countries through air travel by infected passengers. The 1918 'Spanish' influenza pandemic was caused by an H1N1 strain of the influenza virus, which is thought to have arisen due to a major re-assortment, or shift, in the virus genes, resulting in changes to the major surface proteins. The ultimate result was a virus that was capable of very efficient human-to-human spread and to which the population of the time had very little pre-existing immunity. The disease spread across the world in a matter of months, killing over 20 million people. Two further, less severe, influenza pandemics also arose last century. These were the 1957 Asian Flu (H2N2) and the 1968 Hong Kong Flu (H3N2). Again, these pandemics were caused by strains thought to have arisen by genetic reassortment between avian and human influenza viruses. Recent years have seen the emergence of an increasing number of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses, such as H5N1 and H7N7, which have the capacity to infect humans [7, 8] . None of these recent outbreaks has resulted in widespread human-to-human transmission, but the emergence of a strain of influenza with this capability may be just a matter of time. The introduction of vaccines during the last two centuries heralded an era of disease control, culminating in the eradication of smallpox in the late 1970s. Recent advances in vaccine manufacture and increased understanding of immunology and pathogen-host interactions have expanded the repertoire of approaches that can be made to produce vaccines against individual diseases. For some diseases, vaccines are easily produced by inactivating the pathogen. An example is influenza vaccine. Vaccines against other diseases may be more difficult to produce. Vaccines against HIV still elude us, despite nearly 20 years of work by many research groups in many countries. For some emerging diseases, it would be possible to produce a vaccine based on the track record of vaccines against related strains. Other vaccine programmes may need a more sophisticated approach, with production of attenuated, sub-unit or genetically modified vector vaccines. Sophisticated vaccine development generally requires major investment and takes many years to complete. Much of the burden of disease occurs in developing countries, with diseases such as TB, malaria, measles, HIV and parasitic diseases accounting for the majority of the morbidity and mortality due to infectious diseases. In many cases, vaccine development and manufacture has been overlooked by large pharmaceutical companies, since the high cost of developing vaccines against these diseases is not an attractive economic proposition. Such vaccine development, therefore, relies on research grants from public bodies and relief organisations, and the small research groups that take on this work do not have the necessary funding or facilities to manufacture their vaccine candidates themselves, particularly to the quality standards demanded for use in human clinical trials. Other diseases, such as HIV and malaria have so far evaded effective vaccine development due to their complex structures and interactions with their hosts. There are many research programmes available that are developing promising vaccine candidates. Examples of current developmental programs include vaccines for plague, Ebola and botulinum toxin [9] [10] [11] . These candidates could be taken forward into vaccine manufacture in an emergency situation. Updated information on current vaccine development work is required in order to draw quickly upon this information in an emergency. Table 2 gives the potential for vaccine development for a number of diseases that may present a risk to populations, either through natural emergence or deliberate release. Successful vaccine development and evaluation requires access to a wide range of research and evaluation techniques. In addition to fundamental skills in bacteriology and virology, these also include a wide range of molecular biology techniques, essential for many modern vaccine techniques, and a genomics programme that should contribute significantly to identifying potential vaccine candidates from new organisms. The ability to study immune responses in man and animals, and to provide satisfactory animal models are also key to new vaccine design, production and evaluation. The ability to work within the strictest mode of biological containment is critical to the operation of any proposed facility. Undertaking regular operations in the facility ensures that operators remain fully trained and have the requisite experience required to develop products under emergency situations. This requires that the facility spends its non-emergency time working with different types of micro-organisms using a range of different techniques, so that operator skills are maintained at their highest levels at all times. In order to maintain the practical skill base and provide up to date expertise in a variety of techniques, the plant would undertake a range of small-scale production programs. This could be under contract to industry or through partnerships and collaborations with academia, public research bodies and other government departments. There is a worldwide need for new vaccines to deal with public health problems in the Third World. The SVF would be well placed to contribute to global health by developing manufacturing protocols and clinical trial batches of material for candidate vaccines in this area in conjunction with the International Aid community. The facility design needs to meet a number of varied requirements to satisfy the range of activities it could be called upon to house. These include: The necessary services to support GMP, such as purified water supplies and systems to monitor the environment and equipment. 4. The ability to accommodate different production methods, such as cell culture and egg culture for viruses, and fermentation processes for vaccines based on bacterial and expressed protein products. 5. An effluent treatment plant and suitable autoclaves for dealing with contaminated waste. 6. Equipment and space for downstream processes such as purification and fill and finish if these are to be completed in-house. 7. Access to quality control laboratories, media preparation laboratories, equipment preparation services, goods ordering and stores services and engineering support. 8. The ability to support more than one manufacturing process at once, so that a wide skill base can be sustained, and maintenance of the facility can be scheduled so as to allow operations to continue in other parts whilst it is undertaken. 9. Each production unit should be scaled to allow production of batch sizes suitable for clinical trials up to and including phase 3. The exact number of vaccine doses per batch would depend on the nature of the process. 10. The entire plant should be capable of rapid cleaning and turn-around so that all parts can operate in parallel to produce larger quantities of material in an emergency. A modular facility based on separate small production units housed in a shell maintained to GMP standards is being considered as a likely candidate for the facility design. Each unit would essentially be a group of rooms with services, into which equipment can be brought as needed. Whenever possible disposable units would be used for fermenters, centrifugation vessels, containment units and so on, minimising the validation and cleaning procedures necessary before and after each production run. Disposable facilities also mean that much of the GMP quality assurance and paperwork can be duplicated between different products. Careful design should allow a disposable element such as the containment shell to be interfaced to high-cost components such as air handling systems in a way that allows rapid cleaning between processes and improves the turn-around of the facility. Owing to the threat from bioterrorism and emerging diseases, we are proposing a Strategic Vaccine Facility for the UK to mitigate the threat. The facility must be able to work at the highest containment levels and conform to GMP standards. In order to maintain a capability base, it is envisaged that the facility would be used to manufacture small-scale GMP batches of vaccines for clinical trials and niche markets. One possible role of a SVF will be to develop vaccines against key public health diseases, such as those affecting Third World Nations, with a view to transfer the manufacturing processes to vaccine manufacturing industries in these countries. 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